Chapter 4

Elara POV:

For a moment, sitting on the cold bathroom floor, a wild, hysterical urge surged through me. I imagined storming back into Dante’s office, throwing the positive pregnancy test on his desk, and watching the cool, controlled mask of the Don crack. I wanted him to feel a fraction of the shock that was tearing me apart.

But the impulse died as quickly as it came.

I knew exactly what would happen. He wouldn’t see a baby. He would see a Sovrano heir. He would see a chain to bind me to him forever. My escape would be over. The gilded cage would become a fortress, and I would be its permanent prisoner. My child would be raised in a world of violence and fear, taught that loyalty is a weapon and love is a transaction.

No. I would not let that happen.

My panic subsided, replaced by the same icy resolve that had carried me through the last twenty-four hours. My mission was clearer than ever.

My first call was to Mark, my lawyer.

“Don’t file the papers yet,” I said, my voice low and urgent. “Hold them. Don’t notify his counsel until you hear from me. I need more time.”

“Elara, what’s going on? Are you having second thoughts?”

“No,” I said firmly. “I’m more certain than ever. Just… trust me, Mark. I need a head start.”

My next call was to Julian.

“I’m leaving in the morning, Julian. For the residency.”

“So soon?” he asked, surprise in his voice.

“I need a clean break,” I said, the understatement of the century.

“I understand,” he said, his voice warm with a kindness I desperately needed. “Be safe, Elara. And create something beautiful.”

I packed my small suitcase with a new sense of purpose. Tucked inside, alongside my sketchbooks, were the signed divorce papers and the positive pregnancy test. They were my declaration of independence and my reason for fighting.

The next morning, before the sun had even begun to touch the Chicago skyline, I walked through the penthouse one last time. It looked like a mausoleum, cold and lifeless. On the polished mahogany of Dante’s bedside table, I left my wedding ring. It was a heavy, ostentatious diamond that had always felt more like a handcuff than a symbol of love.

Next to it, I placed a small, simple photo album. The one I had made for our first anniversary, which he had never bothered to open. It was filled with pictures from the past four years. Me at gallery openings, alone. Me on holidays, alone. Me at family dinners, sitting at the opposite end of a long table from him, alone. It was a quiet, undeniable chronicle of his absence.

I didn’t leave a note. The empty space beside him was message enough.

I walked out the door and didn’t look back.

The airport was a blur of anonymous faces. I checked my bag, went through security, and found my gate, all on autopilot. As I sat waiting to board, I saw it on the news screen above the gate. A live shot from a private airfield. Dante and Isabella, climbing the steps to a sleek private jet, looking every bit the untouchable power couple. They were probably flying to the coast to oversee their new shipping routes. Conquering new territory.

My commercial flight was called. I boarded, found my window seat, and buckled myself in. As my plane taxied down the runway, it passed the private airfield. I could see their jet, a silver shark poised to take flight. Our paths were literally diverging, right here on the tarmac.

He was ascending into a world of greater power and influence. I was flying away to a quiet, unknown future.

The plane lifted off the ground, climbing higher and higher into the clouds. I watched the sprawling city of Chicago shrink below me until it was just a pattern of lights against the dark earth. Dante’s kingdom, his tower, his entire world, disappeared from view.

A sense of peace, profound and absolute, settled over me for the first time in years. It wasn’t just relief. It was liberation.

I placed a hand over my still-flat stomach. A silent promise.

We were free.

Chapter 5

Dante POV:

Two weeks later, I stepped off my jet feeling like a god. The deal with the Romano family was sealed. Our combined power had crushed two rival families without a single shot fired. It was a masterpiece of strategy and intimidation. Isabella was a sharp weapon, but she was still just a weapon. I was the one who wielded it.

I was victorious. Untouchable. The undisputed king of Chicago.

My driver met me on the tarmac. “Home, Mr. Sovrano?”

“Home,” I said, a rare, genuine smile touching my lips. I had earned this. Two weeks of tension and negotiation. Now I just wanted a glass of my best scotch and the quiet, uncomplicated presence of my wife. Elara would be in her studio, smelling of turpentine and oil paints. She would be angry about the gallery, of course. She would give me the silent treatment for a day or two, but she would get over it. She always did. Her anger was a soft, harmless thing.

The penthouse was silent when I walked in. Eerily so. The air was still. No scent of paint. No quiet hum of music from her studio.

“Elara?” I called out, my voice echoing in the vast, empty space.

Nothing.

An uneasy feeling, foreign and unwelcome, began to crawl up my spine.

I walked through the living area, into the kitchen. Everything was pristine, untouched. I went to our bedroom. The bed was perfectly made. But something was wrong. Her scent was gone.

Then I saw it. On my bedside table. Her wedding ring, sitting next to a small, leather-bound photo album.

My blood ran cold.

I picked up the ring. It felt like a block of ice in my hand. My fingers, suddenly clumsy, fumbled with the album. I opened it.

The first picture was of her at a charity gala two years ago. She was smiling, but her eyes were sad. She was standing alone. I remembered that night. I had been in a back room, closing a deal.

I turned the page. Elara on a yacht in Greece. Alone. I had sent her on vacation while I dealt with a turf war.

Page after page, it was the same story. Elara at Christmas dinner, at the far end of the table. Elara at the opening of the opera season. Elara at her own gallery exhibition, a picture someone must have sent her, a tight, brave smile on her face, an empty space beside her where I should have been.

It was a catalogue of my neglect. A silent, brutal testimony.

The uneasy feeling turned into a stone of dread in my gut. This wasn’t her usual quiet anger. This was something different. Something final.

“No,” I whispered, the word hollow in the silent room.

I threw the album down and strode to her studio. I threw open the doors.

Empty.

The entire room was sanitized. Her easels were gone. Her canvases, her paints, her brushes—all of it. It was as if she had never been there. The only thing left was a faint, lingering scent of turpentine, a ghost of her presence.

Panic, raw and suffocating, seized me. I ripped my phone from my pocket and dialed her number. It rang once, then went straight to a cold, automated voice.

*“The number you have dialed has been disconnected.”*

I tried again. And again. The same message.

A fear I hadn’t felt since I was a boy, cornered in an alley by a rival gang, clawed at my throat. It was the terrifying feeling of absolute loss of control.

Just then, my assistant, Marco, entered the penthouse. He was holding a large manila envelope.

“Sir, this just arrived by courier from a law firm.”

Isabella followed him in, a smug look on her face. “Trouble in paradise, Dante? Did the little bird finally fly the coop?”

I ignored her. I snatched the envelope from Marco’s hand, my eyes locking on the seal of the Cook County courthouse. My fingers ripped it open.

I scanned the legalese, my mind struggling to process the words. *“Decree of Dissolution of Marriage.” “Irreconcilable Differences.”*

Final. Legally binding.

Then my eyes fell on the date it was signed. Two weeks ago. The day of her gallery opening.

A memory slammed into me with the force of a physical blow. Elara in my office. Her face, a mask of calm. Her voice, cool and level. *“I just need a signature.”* The papers she’d put in front of me. The ‘X’ marking the spot.

I had signed my own divorce papers.

I had signed them like they were nothing. An annoyance. A distraction from more important things.

My own arrogance. My own dismissal of her. She had used it against me like a stiletto, sliding it between my ribs so perfectly I hadn’t even felt the wound.

A sound tore from my throat. It was a guttural, inhuman roar of pure fury and pain. It wasn’t the controlled anger of a Don; it was the raw agony of an animal.

“Get out,” I snarled at Isabella, my voice a low, dangerous growl.

“Dante, don’t be ridiculous—”

“GET OUT!” I bellowed, swiping a crystal decanter of scotch off a table. It shattered against the wall, spraying amber liquid and glass across the marble floor.

She flinched, her eyes wide with fear, and scrambled out of the apartment. Marco was already gone.

I stood there, breathing heavily, in the ruins of my silent, empty home. I had conquered a city. I had built an empire. I had everything.

And in a single, quiet moment of my own making, I had just lost the only thing that ever truly mattered. My entire world had just turned to dust.

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